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History of home:

Wood cladding dramatically changed the exterior of this house, which originally contrasted twentieth-century and medieval building techniques. The house was built around 1911 by M.R. Chappell Ltd. The interior is finished in oak and originally contained three fireplaces. The house was used as a facility for naval officers during world war 2, and later became ana annex for Isle Royale Hotel.

Features of home:

* 25 rooms
* 3 floors
* 2 fireplaces
* Harbour front view
* Historic north end with museums dating to the 1700's
* 2 minute drive to Sydney yacht club
* Concrete foundation and primary level
* New roof in 2005
* Large paned patio windows with views of sailboats and yachts
* Large deck to enjoy the gentle cape breton summer nights
* Steps away from the Sydney boardwalk where you can enjoy local Cape Breton musicians, dazzling buskers, friendly neighbourly chats and gentle breezes
* Sail from Sydney harbour along the eastern Atlantic ocean to eastern ports in the United States.
* Gaze into the harbour for a rare glimpse of a whale, seal or bald eagle soaring nearby
* 5 minutes to downtown Sydney
* 20 minutes to local airport
* 15 minutes to Cape Breton University which has international campus extensions in Cairo, Egypt
* 400kms from Halifax, Nova Scotia
* 45 minutes from beautiful Baddeck and its Bell Bay golf course
* Several golf courses on Cape Breton island
* Enjoy natural scenery at its best with marine and wildlife viewing
* Sea kayaking, hunting, fishing and much more

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Celtic Colours

http://www.celtic-colours.com/about/about-the-festival.html

Since 1997, the Celtic Colours International Festival has featured hundreds of musicians from all over the Celtic world and attracted tens of thousands of visitors to Cape Breton Island. For nine days in October, Cape Breton Island is home to a unique celebration of music and culture as the Celtic Colours International Festival presents dozens of concerts all over the island, an extensive line-up of workshops, a visual art series of exhibitions, and a nightly Festival Club. Over the years, artists have travelled from Scotland, Ireland, Wales, England, Brittany, Spain, Denmark, Germany, and Cuba as well as from across the United States and Canada to join the finest of Cape Breton's musicians, singers, dancers, storytellers and tradition-bearers for the annual Autumn celebration.

One of the things that sets Celtic Colours apart from the vast majority of festivals taking place around the globe is that it isn't limited to just one location. Communities around Cape Breton Island host concerts and workshops at a time when the fall leaves are at their most brilliant and travelling around the island offers one breathtaking view after another. These communities are the places where the culture has been nurtured for over 200 years providing context for the roots of the music and celebrating each community's contribution to our living Celtic culture.

In many of these communities, the local fire hall, parish hall or community centre has hosted musical events for generations, in some cases, literally moving the fire trucks out of the hall to accommodate a dance. Venues for Celtic Colours vary from an 18th Century reconstructed French Chapel to brand new state of the art performance facilities to community halls, but all venues share in common the prominent place each holds in the community it serves. The Celtic culture of music, dance and story telling lives on in these communities and provides foundation for the celebration of living culture that is the Celtic Colours International Festival.
With Celtic Colours International Festival's ambitious schedule (as many as eight concerts each day), it is simply impossible to see and hear everything. The organizers of the Festival realize this and take special care in the programming of each show so that it is possible to get a taste of all that the Festival has to offer on any given day. Whether it's Gaelic singing you are most interested in, or Cape Breton fiddling, or local dance traditions, outstanding accordion playing, perhaps, or an afternoon of world-class bagpiping, Celtic Colours festival-goers can tailor their musical experience to suit their tastes.

Celtic music has seen a resurgence of interest in North America during recent years. Fueled in part by the success and popularity of entertainers like Natalie MacMaster, Buddy MacMaster, the Barra MacNeils, Ashley MacIsaac, the Rankin Family and Rita MacNeil, this interest has focused attention on Cape Breton Island, its music, its people and its culture. Celtic Colours offers the opportunity for visitors to go beyond simply listening to the music. Workshops, offered in many aspects of Celtic and Gaelic culture, allow visitors and residents alike to get the hands-on experience they desire. Host communities around the island present workshops in Gaelic language and song, components of tradition, instrument instruction and traditional dance, as well as offering cultural tours, ceilidhs and a lecture series. They also organize an extensive array of community events including meals and dances.

One of the most popular features of the Celtic Colours International Festival every year is the Festival Club. Located at the Gaelic College in St. Ann's, the Festival Club opens as the evening concerts are closing, offering an opportunity for Festival artists to perform in a more informal setting, or to get a session in with friends and colleagues from near and far. Performance is by invitation only and depends upon artist availability on any given night. Although the license only allows the bar to stay open until 3:00 am, the music has been known to continue well beyond that time.

The festival is held at the height of the island's spectacular fall colours, allowing visitors to enjoy breathtaking scenery as they travel to their next event. Traveling to an event may take a visitor around the pristine Bras d'Or Lakes, Canada's largest saltwater lake, or around the Cabot Trail, often called North America's most scenic drive. Wherever you go in Cape Breton at this time of year, you are bound to find amazing scenery around every turn.

Celtic Colours International Festival is recognized as a world-class event, both locally and internationally. The Festival was named the Tourism Industry Association of Canada 2007 Event of the Year, has received three East Coast Music Awards for Event of the Year, in 2007, 2006 and 2005, a Tourism Association of Nova Scotia's Crystal Award for Events / Conferences 2002, and was named American Bus Association's Top Event in Canada and Attractions Canada's Top Cultural Event in 2001. In recent years, Cape Breton Island has also been recognized by Conde Nast Magazine for its scenic beauty and friendly people (voted number one in the world by its readership) and by National Geographic Traveler as among the top travel destinations in the world.